A Journey to the Centre of the Earth

(Greg DeLong) #1
"Yes."

..........

"Well,  make    ready,  I   am  about   to  pronounce   your    name,"  said    the Professor.

I applied my ear close to the sides of the cavernous gallery, and as soon as the
word "Harry" reached my ear, I turned round and, placing my lips to the wall,
repeated the sound.


..........

"Forty seconds," said my uncle. "There has elapsed forty seconds between the
two words. The sound, therefore, takes twenty seconds to ascend. Now, allowing
a thousand and twenty feet for every second—we have twenty thousand four
hundred feet—a league and a half and one-eighth."


These   words   fell    on  my  soul    like    a   kind    of  death   knell.

"A  league  and a   half,"  I   muttered    in  a   low and despairing  voice.

..........

"It shall be got over, my boy," cried my uncle in a cheery tone; "depend on
us."


..........

"But    do  you know    whether to  ascend  or  descend?"   I   asked   faintly enough.

..........

"We have to descend, and I will tell you why. You have reached a vast open
space, a kind of bare crossroad, from which galleries diverge in every direction.
That in which you are now lying must necessarily bring you to this point, for it
appears that all these mighty fissures, these fractures of the globe's interior,
radiate from the vast cavern which we at this moment occupy. Rouse yourself,
then, have courage and continue your route. Walk if you can, if not drag yourself
along—slide, if nothing else is possible. The slope must be rather rapid—and
you will find strong arms to receive you at the end of your journey. Make a start,
like a good fellow."


These   words   served  to  rouse   some    kind    of  courage in  my  sinking frame.
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